MegaETH has started its MEGA Buyback program after heavy selling followed the token’s launch. The foundation funded the first repurchase with net revenue from USDm through April 30. The move links stablecoin income with fresh demand for MEGA in secondary markets.
MegaETH Foundation said the first MEGA Buyback used all net income generated by USDm’s issuer. The foundation positioned the program as an ongoing demand loop for its native token. Additionally, it said future repurchases will follow preset rules where possible.

USDm does not come from MegaETH Foundation or MegaLabs. Instead, a separate issuer operates the stablecoin, while its revenue supports the buyback model. This structure keeps issuance separate, although the token economics remain strongly connected.
The MEGA Buyback follows a sharp post-launch decline in MEGA’s market price. Reports noted that MEGA dropped about 38% from its April 30 launch price to $0.138. Hence, the first repurchase arrives as the project seeks stronger market support.
USDm is a yield-bearing stablecoin built on Ethena’s USDtb rails. Its reserves mainly sit in BlackRock’s tokenized U.S. Treasury fund BUIDL through Securitize. Liquid stablecoins support redemptions and help maintain daily operations.
The reserve assets generate yield for the USDm issuer. Under the new plan, that net income now funds the MEGA Buyback program. Therefore, higher USDm supply can increase potential repurchase activity over time.
MegaETH built USDm as an economic engine for its real-time Ethereum Layer 2 network. The model uses stablecoin yield to support sequencer costs, network fees, and MEGA demand. Furthermore, the MEGA Buyback adds a clearer link between usage and token support.
The foundation said future MEGA Buyback operations will run as automatically as possible. However, the repurchase size will change based on USDm supply and reserve yields. This means the program will expand or shrink with stablecoin growth.
MegaETH’s native token has a fixed supply of 10 billion MEGA. The token supports gas payments, staking, and governance within the Layer 2 ecosystem. MegaETH targets sub-millisecond latency and more than 100,000 transactions per second.
The MEGA Buyback may create a steady source of secondary market demand. Yet its strength depends on USDm circulation, reserve income, and real network activity. For now, the program gives MegaETH a revenue-backed mechanism after its early selloff.
The post MegaETH Launches MEGA Buyback as USDm Revenue Fuels Token Demand appeared first on CoinCentral.


